Spartan C3

The Spartan C3 was a three-seat open cockpit United States biplane of the late 1920s.

Spartan C3
C3-165
Role open cockpit biplane
National origin United States
Manufacturer Spartan Aircraft Company
First flight 25 October 1926
Introduction 1928
Status two airworthy in 2001
Primary user Flying schools and barnstorming
Number built approx 122 [1]


Development

The type originated as the Mid-Continent Spartan of 1926. The company was reorganised as Spartan Aircraft Company in 1928 and a series of Spartan C3 planes was built between that year and 1930 . The C3 was a tube, wood and fabric aircraft with two open cockpits accommodating three people, and the tail unit had a distinctive "rounded square" shape. Around 122 examples were completed with various engines leading to differing designations.[1]

Operational history

The C3 was used by schools of flying for training instruction. Other firms utilised the aircraft's two-passenger capability in "barnstorming operations". Three C3 aircraft survived in the USA in 2001, of which two were airworthy. Currently, as of 2009, there is only one left that is airworthy. This plane is owned and operated by Lee Kunze of Howards Grove, Wisconsin, USA[1]

Variants

A Spartan C3-225 on display at EAA AirVenture Museum in Oshkosh, Wisconsin

(data from http://www.aerofiles.com)

C3-1 
125 h.p. Ryan-Siemens radial (main production version - approx 100 examples);
C3-2 
120 h.p. Walter (also known as the C3-120);
C3-3 
170 h.p. Curtiss Challenger;
C3-4 
115 h.p. Axelson A;
C3-165 
165 h.p. Wright J-6-5 (initially known as the C3-5);
C3-166 
165 h.p. Comet 7-E;
C3-225 
225 h.p. Wright J-6;

Specifications (C3-165)

C3-165 on display at the Old Rhinebeck Aerodrome Museum near New York in June 2005

Data from Simpson, 2001, p. 518

General characteristics

Performance

References

Notes
  1. 1 2 3 Simpson, 2001, p. 517
Bibliography
  • Simpson, Rod (2001). Airlife's World Aircraft. Airlife Publishing Ltd. ISBN 1-84037-115-3. 

External links

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